A dynamically generated set of typesetting utility classes, in charge of modifying an element's font-size and line-height, based on sizes defined in the $jigsass-sizes variable.
Additionally, JigSass Type provides utility classes for setting an element's
font-weight
, font-style
and font-family
stacks through the
$jigsass-font-stacks
variable.
u-type--<named-size>
(example: .u-type--alpha)u-fw--<weight>
(example: .u-fw--700)u-fs--i
(italic)u-fs--n
(normal)u-fs--o
(oblique)u-ff--<stack>
(example: .u-ff--serif)
Using npm:
npm i -S jigsass-utils-type
Set named font stacks in $jigsass-font-stacks
:
$jigsass-font-stacks: (
sans-serif: ('Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif),
serif: (Georgia, Times, 'Times New Roman', serif)
);
And then use them as font-family modfiers:
@include jigsass-util(u-ff, $modifier: serif);
Import JigSass Utils Type into your main scss file near its very end, together with all other utilities (utilities should always be the last to be imported).
@import 'path/to/jigsass-utils-type/scss/index';
Like all other JigSass Utils, JigSass Type does not automatically generate any CSS when imported. You would need to explicitly indicate that each individual typesetting class should actually be generated in each component or object it is used in:
// _c.foo.scss
.foo {
@include jigsass-util(u-type, $modifier: alpha);
...
}
// _c.bar.scss
.bar {
@include jigsass-util(u-type, $modifier: epsilon);
@include jigsass-util(u-type, $modifier: delta, $from: large);
...
}
Doing so helps us a great deal with portability, as no matter where we import component or object partials, the correct utility classes will be generated. Think of it as a poor man's dependency management.
Developer communication is also assisted by including "dependencies" wherever they are required, as anyone going through a partial, can easily understand how it should be marked up with just a glance.
As far as bloat goes, just don't worry about it - the actual styles will only be generated once, at the location in the cascade where the Jigsass Type partial was imported into the main file.
JigSass Type classes are responsive-enabled, using JigSass MQ and the breakpoints defined in the $jigsass-breakpoints variable.
Based on the breakpoint arguments passed to jigsass-util
when including a type class, responsive
modifiers are generated according to the following logic:
.u-type--modifier[-[-from-{breakpoint-name}][-until-{breakpoint-name}][-misc-{breakpoint-name}]]
So, assuming the medium
, large
and landscape
breakpoints are defined in $jigsass-breakpoints
as 600px
, 1024px
and (orientation: landscape)
respectively,
@include jigsass-util(u-type, $modifier: zeta);
will generate the .u-type--zeta
class, which is not limited to any media-query.
@include jigsass-util(u-type, $modifier: zeta, $until: medium);
will generate the .u-type--zeta--until-medium
class, which will be in effect at
(max-width: 37.49em)
and will override styles in the default class until that point.
@include jigsass-util(u-type, $modifier: zeta, $from: large, $misc: landscape);
will generate the .u-type--zeta--from-large-when-landscape
class, which will go into
effect at (min-width: 64em) and (orientation: landscape)
and will override styles in the default
class under these conditions.
Regardless of how many times a class is included, or where, it will only be generated once,
where the jigsass-utils-type
partial was imported, leaving us with a css file as small
as possible, and a predictable cascade.
The full documentation was generated using mdcss, and is available at https://txhawks.github.io/jigsass-utils-type/
It is a best practice for JigSass modules to not automatically generate css on @import
, but
rather have the user explicitly enable the generation of specific styles from the module.
Contributions in the form of pull-requests, issues, bug reports, etc. are welcome. Please feel free to fork, hack or modify JigSass Type in any way you see fit.
Good documentation is crucial for usability, scalability and maintainability. When contributing, please do make sure that both its Sass functionality (functions, mixins, variables and placeholder selectors), as well as the CSS it generates (selectors, concepts, usage exmples, etc.) are well documented.
Jigsass Type uses Jonathan Neal's mdcss.
When styles and documentation comments are not automatically generated by your module on @import
,
please use the sgSrc/sg.scss
file to enable their generation.
In addition, any file in sgSrc/assets
will be available for use in the style guide.
┬ ./
│
├─┬ scss/
│ └─ index.scss # The module's importable file.
│
├─┬ sgSrc/ # Style guide sources
│ │
│ ├── sg.sccs # It is a best practice for JigSass
│ │ # modules to not automatically generate
│ │ # css and documentation on `@import.`
│ │ # Please use this file to enable css
│ │ # and documentation comments) generation.
│ │
│ └── assets/ # Files in `sgSrc/assets` will be
│ # available for use in the style guide
│
└─┬ docs/ # Documention
│
└── styleguide/ # Generated documentation
# of the module's CSS
License: MIT